Alright, heres the email I pounded off to this guy....realize the basic explanations necessary to a non initiate of our world I have had to make....
After reading your article on day trading, I have a number of issues with some of the main points you argued. As I day trader, I realize I am potentially biased. I am a proprietary trader, trading a firms money for its, and my profit without having to put anything up myself.
Anyways, day trader and investors are complete opposites!!! One statement you quoted confused day trading with investing...these are completely different. Schwab and a couple other companies you mentioned are simply not day trading firms, but are discount brokerages that sometimes advertise that they cater to 'day traders'....bottom line, they have a confused vocabulary. 300 trades a month?! Just an example of my day today.....I made 348 trades today, totalling 1.6 million shares and made a few thousand (US$). Anything under at least a hundred in a day is really swing trading, not day trading.
Finally, day traders are doing better than ever. News of corporate fraud on CNN in the evening makes us traders feel warm and fuzzy inside as we imagine how we will play the gaps down in those stocks the following day. Any news is good news!!! I will give your profession that!! Volume and volatiliy (two things historically lacking during the months of July and August) get a puff of nitrous from any news, good or bad. Day trading is a zero sum game. When we make money, it is in such a short time frame that someone is losing nearly the same amount. Who? The average investor, investment banks filling large institutional orders, mutual funds, even you. When I am short (and have already made money on it), and your mutual fund has to cover by selling, it pushes prices down further, and in effect, I am taking some of the losses from that fund, and putting it in my wallet. There is no bias long or short. I am just as happy to push a stock down as I am to prop it up. Whatever pays the bills, so to speak. I thought yout article was well written and interesting, however, day traders are doing better than ever. Until volume and volatiliy dries up, we will do fine. Most of the public doesnt even realize what day trading is, and doesnt realize we make just as much shorting as we do going long, and do each about 50% of the time.
So when someone asks me how my portfolio is, I laugh and tell them it only exists for a few seconds at a time. And I love it, for those few seconds, I am truly alive.
Sincerely,
SilverBullet